Code, § 2796, provides:
“After judgment or decree has been rendered in any court against an executor or administrator for any debt, damages, or costs, if the estate is subsequently declared insolvent, such personal representative may file a certified copy of the decree or order of the probate court declaring such estate insolvent with the clerk or register of the court in which such judgment or decree was rendered against the personal representative; whereupon it shall be the duty of such clerk or register to certify back to the probate court a copy of such judgment or decree for payment in the probate court as other claims against insolvent estates, after which no execution shall issue or be further enforced against such executor or administrator or sureties personally, by the court rendering such judgment or decree.”
In Ouchita Nat. Bank v. Fulton,
“This statute was evidently intended, not only to relieve administrators from personal liability upon such judgments after complying with the same [i. e., the statute], but also to make the judgment a fixed charge against the estate, and requiring the ‘payment’ of same as other claims ave paid, that’is, in the same proportion.” (Italics supplied.)
This bill is filed by Laura E. Eggler, a distributee of the estate of H. W. Eggler, deceased, against L. Schulhoefer, as the administrator of Eggler’s estate, and L. A. Fulton. It appears from the averments of the bill that L. A. Fulton sued the administrator in the circuit court of Jefferson county on a promissory note purporting to have been executed by H. W. Eggler in his lifetime. The suit progressed to judgment in favor of the plaintiff against the administrator on, to wit, May 20, 1914. If the estate was liable as the judgment concluded, it was insolvent, and was so reported by the administrator to the probate court where the administration was pending, and the judgment appropriately certified to the probate court (Code, § 2798), whereupon the estate was duly declared insolvent by the probate court. Subsequently a creditor of the estate interposed objections to the allowance of the claim represented by the'judgment. The objection was disallowed;, and on appeal to this court the action of the probate court in overruling the objection was approved and affirmed in Ouchita Nat. Bank v. Fulton,
Reversed and rendered.
